Nuitka Standalone Mode is Work in Progress

Many of you who turn to my easy to use, highly compatible Python compiler
Nuitka, do this mostly because they seek to solve the
deployment problem that Python suffers from.

Be this, because you want to use a newer Python2.7 on RHEL5 without installing
anything at all there. Or because Windows is difficult to tackle otherwise.

For the longest time, Nuitka had not offered anything in this domain, focusing
solely on being an accelerator. Lately, I have taken up the challenge and
polished initial solutions submitted by contributors.

This first showed up in the 0.4.7 release, but turned out relatively weak. While
first examples were working on Linux, it was not working at all on Windows
(anymore). And basically there was a huge lack of tests.

Actually I didn't mean for it to be released with that feature, but as parts of
it seemed to work, I did so. But truth to be sad, that feature is not nearly as
polished in that release as you would like it to.

In current development releases, of
what is going to become 0.5.0 really soon now, it's much better already. More
things actually work. But it appears, there will be more ground to cover, and
this is a lot of stuff to sort out.

So, this is mostly about asking you two things. Give that development release a
try and report issues you have with it. And help me.

And have patience. I am developing Nuitka as an accelerator on a "no known bugs"
basis. That means, once I know of a bug, I will fix it. OK, some issues in fact
take longer, but then it really is not important at all, but difficult at the
time. For standalone mode, I can't do it that way, or I would have to neglect
the acceleration parts, which I totally don't want to do.

Because while you maybe are only interested in a packaging solution, many others
would like to have that orders of magnitude speedup that I have been aiming for
and that feels near now. This is about making Python a viable language for more
uses than it currently is.

So why do it in the first place. For one, I am hoping that it helps people to
not turn away from Python. And second, and more important, I am hoping that by
making it more useful, more people will join me. (Oh, and thirdly, it's also a
nice puzzle to solve. I seem to enjoy that.)

Ultimately both modes will be needed, standalone, and acceleration. And it seems
like I am working to provide both. For standalone, more often, than seeking to
avoid bugs as far as possible, I am going to rely on your participation.